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Monday, December 11, 2017

In 1966, Noma, the largest Christmas
tree light company in the world, filed for bankruptcy as the domestic Christmas
light industry struggled with foreign
competition and the introduction of the much smaller, foreign-made string-lights.

In the industry flux, some companies changed the shape of the larger
decorative lightbulbs. The new
replacement bulbs came to a sharper point, emulating the shape of a candle flame. This was a marketing ploy for the elderly,
who could still remember a time when tree lights were actually candles.

Being only a child, I received this
change as a heresy. Each year more of
the older, classically convex bulbs burned out and were replaced with these
fake flames. The magic memories of my first Christmases seemed to burn out with
the convex bulbs.

One older style light unaccountably continued
to burn atop of the family tree for a decade. It symbolized what became only
the memory of a joyous religious longing.
In 2001, when my own son reached the age of six, he complained of the
same widespread, religious experience:

“Daddy,
this Christmas tree is not giving me any warmth.”

This is like the experience of the Jewish
people when they returned home from seventy years of slavery. They
began rebuilding a Temple, but those who had seen the previous Temple as young children
were grief-stricken. It was just not the same.
The mysterious glory which filled Solomon’s Temple did not re-fill the
new one. The glory had departed. They were back in Jerusalem, but somehow it
did not seem like home.

I fear most people experience something
akin to this homesickness at Christmas.
They cannot wring a departed joy out of all the festivities. In my boy’s words, Christmas trees no longer
“give them “warmth.”

“Yes,”
I told my son, “for it was never really the trees that gave the warmth.”
Christmas is not so much about the trimmings as it is about being homesick for
a place we’ve never been. It’s about the
burning glory of the eternal city returning to us. Heaven comes to reassure us our earliest
experiences of that true home were no lie.

About this Blog

Ministry Mind and Heart is edited by Kent Ellett, the minister of the Speedway Church of Christ on the west side of Indianapolis, Indiana. This blog seeks to facilitate a wider discussion about the possibility of spiritual formation in our local community as well as within the wider church.